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The Rise of Secularism and the Decline of Religiosity in Ireland: The Pattern of Religious Change in Europe

Citation

Breen, M.J. & Reynolds, C.(2011),'The Rise of Secularism and the Decline of Religiosity in Ireland: The Pattern of Religious Change in Europe', The International Journal of Religion and Spirituality in Society, Vol.1(2), p 195-212.

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Peer Reviewed

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Breen, M.J. & Reynolds, C.(2011),'The Rise of Secularism and the Decline of Religiosity in Ireland: The Pattern of Religious Change in Europe', The International Journal of Religion and Spirituality in Society, Vol.1(2), p 195-212.

Abstract

The European Values Study is a pan-European project which utilises an omnibus survey
focusing especially on values associated with work, religion, lifestyles and other issues. Its most recent
data gathering exercise was in 2008, the fourth of its kind. This study focuses on changing religious
values in Ireland over the span of the EVS (1981-2008) and examines the rise in secularism and the
rapid decrease in church participation, which brings Ireland much close to European norms. The data
to hand suggest a variety of important social questions: If religious and social values and attitudes
are changing, what are the implications for Irish society? As we become an increasingly educated
society in quantifiable terms, what is happening to our value and belief systems? Does the erosion of
church practice mean the erosion of values or are we simply witnessing transference of allegiance
from institutions to self? Some commentators suggest that reduction of care and concern for others,
a reduced sense of God, and a minimised approach to things religious, allied with a rise in liberalism,
are not of themselves harbingers of prosperity and joy for society; the opposite they contend is true,
and will result in decreased happiness and increased alienation. Is it incontrovertible that Ireland will
be different in the future, that the social map will have very different contours, especially in relation
to institutional religion. As the Irish let go of things deeply rooted in their culture and tradition, is this
simply a matter of becoming a mature nation amongst the nations of Europe?